Principles Of The Constitution

Now you can bring our "Making of America: One Day Seminar" into your own home. This package includes our seminar guide (download here) that you would receive at one of our live seminars, plus a professional recording (on 2 DVDs) of one of our 8 hour seminars. Invite your family and friends to join you and discover together the Founders' Freedom Formula. Additional copies of the seminar guide are available for only $3 each when you order 10 or more.

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Our story began in 1971 with the realization that Americans were losing sight of the incredible“Freedom Formula” our founding fathers gave their lives for.

It became the mission of the NationalCenter for Constitutional Studies (NCCS), originally calledThe Freeman Institute, to restore the U.S.

Constitution in accordance with the intent of America's Founders.

Through the years NCCS haspublished books, (including The 5000 Year Leap & The Making of America) as well as otherproduct, in an effort to educate the public on correct Constitutional Principles.

In addition to our books, study Aids, and other educational resources, we have been active inholding thousands of seminars covering every state in the union.

These seminars have ranged inlength fromevening meetings to all day events.

The Constitution of the United States

These documents have been a beacon to all men and women who value freedom. They are just asmeaningful now as when they were written. As the American statesman Henry Clay said, “TheConstitution of the United States was not made merely for the generation that then existed but forposterity–

unlimited, undefined, endless, perpetual posterity.”

The Declaration of Independence and the US Constitution were written with the intent that theycould be easily read and understood by ordinary citizens. The difficulty comes with the changes inthe English language that have occurred since they were written, making both documents moredifficult to decipher.

Freedom Defined addresses this problem by providing instant access to the definitions of wordsand phrases used in these documents. The definitions are based on dictionaries used during theearly years of the United States, the records of the Constitutional Convention, and the writings ofthe

Founding Fathers.

Proclaim Liberty Throughout all the Land

Welcome to our new study course,Proclaim Liberty Throughout all the Land.

In this course you willlearn the basic principles that are embodied in our founding document, The Declaration ofIndependence and the US Constitution.

You will also become conversant with each part of theConstitution and understand, perhaps for the first time, how nearly every problem we face inAmerica today could be easily solved by understanding and applying the wisdom of America'sFounding Fathers.

This course is for anyone 14 and up who wants to learn about the United States Constitution asestablished by America's Founders.

Proclaim Liberty

is broken up into 23 easy to understandlessons with the average lesson length of approximately 30 minutes.

All of the video for this courseisfree for you to view online.

The Final Act for AmericanIndependence

One cannot read the writings of the Founders without discovering that a most singular andimportant feature of the settlers of America was their overpowering sense of mission--

a convictionthat they were taking part in a grand latter-day scene of divine design and magnitude.

This sense of America’s destiny will be found expressed in nearly all of the inaugural addressesgiven by the presidents of the United States. It was not a feeling of superiority or of a conqueringimperialistic nature,but of humble recognition that the great yearnings of the human heart of allpeople is to live in freedom, prosperity, and peace.

In the Founders thinking these yearnings were not limited to just the people in the colonies ofAmerica, but, if possible, the American experiment could eventually be an example and a blessing tothe entire human race.

Thomas Jefferson looked upon the development of freedom under the Constitution as "the world'sbest hope," and wrote to John Dickinson in 1801 that what had been

accomplished in the UnitedStates "will be a standing monument and example for the aim and imitation of the people of othercountries.